Kate Lilley grew up in Perth, on the western edge of Australiasurely
the most remote city on earth. To the north and west, the endless expanses
of the Indian Ocean; to the south, Antarctica; to the north and east,
a million square miles of rock and desert, with the nearest city one
and a half thousand miles away. Her parents are both writers, though
not of the usual literary sort. Her father had been a cane-cutter and
merchant seaman with a passionate adherence to left-wing ideas and working-class
beliefs. Her mother, Dorothy Hewett, is a well-known novelist, poet,
and playwright, and was a member of the Australian Communist Party for
more than twenty years. In her early teens, Kate moved with her family
to Sydney; she later won a scholarship to London and eventually Oxford
University, where she completed a Ph.D. on the topic of Elegy. She wrote
vigorous and attractive poems in her early twenties, then academia buried
her talent under bushels of work for more than a decade. She has emerged
a stronger and a better writer. These poems are taken from her new book
Versary, to be published in England by Salt Publications. They
give us the richness and vigor of the English Renaissance in the service
of a complex set of postmodern concerns; scholarship as a handmaiden
to art; and literature galvanized by passion. We get an alert, sharp-edged
poetry, electric with allusion and irony, compulsively readable.

John Tranter

This page is sponsored by Utah State University Press and the May Swenson
Poetry Award.

Nickys World

As the plot rocks back and forth on a pinhead
count to fifteen very slowly.
By that time you should be alone again
contemplating your evening.

You could go for a ride and take a fall,
break your back and welcome an addiction
or ask Miguel to serve drinks by the pool,
that hunky contractor might stop by.

Finally theres a knock at the door,
a lady policeman shows her badge.
Shes asking if these unusual cufflinks
belong to the father of your children.

Where Was I

High speed trains arent meant for looking:
if you try to solve the blur youll get a headache.
Masks are popular if youre feeling infectious
or prophylactically alert.
Sit back and practise mind-control instead,
turning the pages of a cartoon novel.
This one has pictures of lunch boxes emulating
regions and seasons, ingenious snacks
sold on certain days at certain stations.
Dont try to escape allegory
or over-read the vending machines.
Youll regret it later, and youll miss a lot:
pre-mixed cocktails, blood-type fortunes,
bandaged schoolgirls shitting on Teacher.

Unsolved

volunteers fan out along the shore
the waters surface dimpled with flashlights

on the lake floor twisted in weed
the trail goes cold

the hinge of the locket a tiny sluice
one silver word

Hobohemia

As I brushed your arm and walked so close to you
I imagined meeting up with the author
of the classic statement on dance halls

When I asked about his research into bachelor communities
he answered interminably

Linda likes 36 boys 29 like her
the rest dont care for old time feeling
>whipped preferably pussy anything
liberal touches of baby powder
just because Im lonesome

Youll settle down some day and find Ive gone away
all the fortune cookies equally cheerless
if youre passing by the doctor wants your blood
in exchange for a little morphine
its not cheating just common sense

Birds start warbling bright and early
yonder a crash on the highway

I cant help it if the journey seems unreal
sure as Im sitting here
the burden of the refrain will fall on me

say when

even the blossoming tips of fruit trees
weep when they taste the exceptional flavour

that last aperitif was too much
Ill throw up the late harvest and ruin the season

are those two sisters now or were they ever
why dont you just shut up and run the test

when I bite through the striped seam of the gel cap
it is bitter to the nth degree

Georgic

The waterfall attracts its share of losers.
Nearby flowers recite past favourites unselfconsciously,
bowing their heads to the grass as the mercury falls.
Jocund and lowing abreact,
whistling charms the furrows.
The aesthetics of picnics gather parks
and trays embossed with birds and branches.
Lunch is served in the royal enclosure
by costumed swains and youths glad of the work.
Dishevelled planets grow up in arrears
and shed their light like imported brocade
used in the manufacture of evening bags.

Starry Messenger

Mouthfuls of shame like an understudy
subigatrix voyage

my melody
my novelette
my secret solar system

courier of lightnings borrowed oeuvre
strolling fricatrice

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Boston Review, 19932005. All rights
reserved. Please do not reproduce without permission.